In Dragons and Dreams, there’s a story called Sunflower about a lonely Butterfly Fairy who wanted a pet. She used her magic to make a kitten out of a sunflower, but it turned out that the kitten was huge compared to the tiny Butterfly Fairy. Ultimately, she found a lonely little human girl and gave the sunflower kitten to her.

I got a note back from an early reader who asked whether the Butterfly Fairy ever got herself a proper kitten, so I wrote Pussy Willow, where Butterfly Fairy uses a pussy willow to make a kitten just the right size for her. When Willow got into some trouble with some fireflies and Butterfly Fairy rescued her, both of them made new friends. Urisk, which means “brownie” in Scots Gaelic, seemed like he’d make another good resident of the Wide Wild Field. Lois McMaster Bujold, an excellent author of science fiction and fantasy, always asks herself, “What is the worst thing I could do to this character?” Since brownies do most of their work at night when everybody is asleep, I thought of a brownie who was afraid of the dark. To get around this, he makes friends with a firefly. When I finished writing Urisk’s stories, it turned out that I had another collection of bedtime stories.

The Littlest Firefly was another teaching story written for my daughter. Even in preschool, she felt different from the other children and was bullied or ostracized for being different. The Littlest Firefly is about a firefly who never flashes light in time with any of the other firefly communities. The story is about being true to yourself and trust that somewhere out there is a tribe where you can fit in and still be your real self.

In Dragons and Dreams, there’s a story called Sunflower about a lonely Butterfly Fairy who wanted a pet. She used her magic to make a kitten out of a sunflower, but it turned out that the kitten was huge compared to the tiny Butterfly Fairy. Ultimately, she found a lonely little human girl and gave the sunflower kitten to her.

I got a note back from an early reader who asked whether the Butterfly Fairy ever got herself a proper kitten, so I wrote Pussy Willow, where Butterfly Fairy uses a pussy willow to make a kitten just the right size for her. When Willow got into some trouble with some fireflies and Butterfly Fairy rescued her, both of them made new friends. Urisk, which means “brownie” in Scots Gaelic, seemed like he’d make another good resident of the Wide Wild Field. Lois McMaster Bujold, an excellent author of science fiction and fantasy, always asks herself, “What is the worst thing I could do to this character?” Since brownies do most of their work at night when everybody is asleep, I thought of a brownie who was afraid of the dark. To get around this, he makes friends with a firefly. When I finished writing Urisk’s stories, it turned out that I had another collection of bedtime stories.

The Littlest Firefly was another teaching story written for my daughter. Even in preschool, she felt different from the other children and was bullied or ostracized for being different. The Littlest Firefly is about a firefly who never flashes light in time with any of the other firefly communities. The story is about being true to yourself and trust that somewhere out there is a tribe where you can fit in and still be your real self.

Dragons and Dreams is a collection of six fairy tales that I wrote for my children:

A Princess for Tea

The Grumpy Dragon:

Sunflower

The Dark

The Third Precious Thing

Child of Promise

I’m often asked which of my books is my favorite. While one isn’t supposed to have favorites among one’s “children,” I do, and it’s Dragons and Dreams.

The stories in Dragons and Dreams were created to tell my children at bedtime. When I think of this book, I feel two little bodies snuggled next to me as I tell them the stories. After a while, I’d forget the exact wording, and my kids would correct me. “That’s not how the story goes, Mommy!” So I wrote them down to have the exact words each time I told them the story. Many years later the self-publishing revolution came about and I thought, Why not?If my kids loved these stories, maybe other kids will too. And that’s how all this started.

Each of the stories in this collection relates to an event in my children’s life.

A Princess for Tea was written for fun, with a sly undercurrent about the importance of proper research. Now as adults, both David and Tori are research junkies, just like their mother and father.

The Grumpy Dragon was written for Tori, who never wanted to go to bed. Once she was in bed, she didn’t want to stay there. Twenty years later, Tori still bugs me to write the sequel.

Tori loves cats and, once upon a time, she had a large, squishy yellow-and-orange stuffed cat named Sunflower. The story Sunflower explained how the stuffed toy cat came to have such un-catlike colors.

I wrote The Dark to give David and Tori a different story about the dark than the boogie man or monsters in the closet. I wrote it after seeing the play The Blue Bird by Maurice Maeterlinck. I was dissatisfied by the play and wanted to do something different with the idea. As The Dark evolved, it turned out that the two stories have very little to do with each other except a vague quest by two children. I like my version better.

The Third Precious Thing is my attempt at a classic fairy tale. In it, the king’s three sons are sent out to wander through the kingdom, and at the end of the year, they are to bring the most precious thing they find. Very few ever understand the real reason the old king chooses the one he did. It’s just a little quiet chuckle to myself.

Child of Promise was written when my son started having issues around being adopted. The idea behind Child of Promise is simple: Every child is the child of promise.

Hi! I’m Becca, and I write fairy tales. Over the next few months I will be posting a brief essay every two weeks that tells the story behind my stories. Some people have asked me where I get the inspiration for my stories, stories, so I wrote it down for your enjoyment.

Home to Gaia, by Ina Curic is simply a beautiful book. Physically, it’s gorgeously done, in a very clear Waldorf Education art style. It’s a charming fairy tale where the Yellow Elf guides little ones – and not so little ones – to the heart of the earth where they are embraced by Mother Gaia in love and sweet dreams. Blended with that story, however, is a guided meditation to help children make the transition from busy playtime to a deep, restful sleep. I look forward to seeing more of Ina’s work. You can read more about this lovely book at https://imaginecreatively.com/hometogaia/.

Note, this book is not suited to a regular eink kindle. It needs at least a tablet screen, so you can see the lovely artwork in all its delicate colors and shades.

We now have a Pinterest page. It’s a work in progress, but I have the two most important boards set up: one for free resources for teachers and homeschoolers, and another that lists all the books. Feel free to look around, add pins, and pin some of our pictures to your boards. I’m still learning how to use Pinterest, but I’m having a great time adding to my boards. If you follow me, I’ll probably follow you right back. And if you have any suggestions for Pinterest groups that it would be useful for me, please let me know.

I recently got to read Teddy O’Malley’s book The Fairy’s Bubble Wand. This is a cute story about Fay, the Fairy King’s daughter, and a human girl named Vadaya. Vadaya’s big sister and main friend is going away to college, and as a going away givt, she gives Vadaya a tube of bubble-stuff to cheer her up.

Meanwhile, Fay has been failing Fairy School, and is depressed and sad, because she so much wants her father to be proud of her. Somehow, Vadaya winds up the same size as Fay, and they go off to rescue Fay’s father, who has gotten lost. Both girls lack self-confidence, but working together they manage to escape the Ice Fairies and have other adventures, while Fay discovers her fairy magic and Vadaya discovers what Fay calls here “human magic”. Through their cleverness, and a work of advanced magic that Fay isn’t supposed to be able to do, the girls rescue Fay’s faather, and all ends happily.

This is a charming book, simply told with nice, clean writing. It might seem a bit young for children who can read it for themselves, but they’ll be captivated by Fay and Vadaya and their adventures. The chapters make nice breaks, so it would be good to read a chapter or two at bedtime.

I hope there’s a followup story with more adventures for Fay and Vadaya – I’ll certainly read them, if there are.